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For me, it’s one note (or one foot) in front of another. Moment to moment- respond to what came before and build the arc. Let it go anywhere.
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06-21-2023 10:16 AM
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Works best for me if I choose target notes. I don’t want my improv to be noodling, to be meandering. It can come from any starting point and can travel any path, but it likes to have destinations.
Perhaps when I get to your skill level, the target notes will choose themselves.
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I slow right down and try to play
the next note/notes in my head
(ie no licks)
it is painfully slow
I can’t use it in performance
it would decimate the audience
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Now that is beautiful music.
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I often start with a chord tone on the first chord and then scat sing to myself from that note -- and try to play what I'm singing.
If you can scat sing a line you like, then it's just the mechanics of getting it on the guitar.
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Originally Posted by coyote-1
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Originally Posted by pingu
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Originally Posted by GordonM
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Originally Posted by rpjazzguitar
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Originally Posted by Mark Kleinhaut
'...respond to what came before and build the arc...' That's the antidote to banal noodling. If the brain can remember where you've been, it can make some suggestions of where to go for some form and intent. A sort of self-awareness.
This kind of thing has to be practised. You're very good at it, and it's clear you've spent some time on it.
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I try to find something that surprises me, an unexpected or unintended sound that wakes my ear up and dares me to follow. The better my ear becomes, the more interesting the responses and calls become (not easier though, for me, easy is my cue to challenge expectation.)
Beautiful piece Mark, I can hear your thought process. Nice.
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Originally Posted by Mark Kleinhaut
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Originally Posted by ccroft
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Originally Posted by Jimmy blue note
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Originally Posted by ragman1
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Last time when it went well (a solo, at home), I was thinking about a person who appears to be 10 times more..
"in control" than the usual me all the time. You know, that control-freak type. I thought "I am exactly like that too.. with my soloing also".
So I tried to force my attitude to shut down and it seemed to work for a while. It felt great and fresh.
edit: felt good. i know how great feels, wasn't thatbut good enough is already awesome
Last edited by emanresu; 06-22-2023 at 01:30 PM.
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Originally Posted by emanresu
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Originally Posted by Mark Kleinhaut
You sound great Mark!
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Ideally, I have a chance to LISTEN to the piece, without playing it. So I can understand where it's coming from. If I do that, I actually start playing in my head, not with scales and licks but with melodies. A very different approach than
Being put on the spot, cold, and have to improvise immediately. At that point I will absolutely fall back on scales and licks.
The ultimate goal is to merge those 2 approaches until neither one exists individually. Sort of like with singing: the ultimate goal is to blend the chest and head voice together until they are one: Bel Canto.
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Originally Posted by ruger9
I said "I've turned the recording button off. Catch your breath. It's not on the list but give me a few choruses of Green Dolphin, just for fun, just for each other." and they listened, had a good awareness. Then I said "One take, not tapes rolling, just for each other." and they nailed it. Lucky, I'd lied and I was recording. That was the keeper.
Listen. Not easy to do when you're not doing it, the most natural way to play when you're there. Yeah, ruger9, exactly.
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Originally Posted by pingu
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Originally Posted by Spirit59
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Yeah, I think folks are picking up on how the question must really be, "How do you play well spontaneously?", right?
That would be asking how musical judgement's role fits in with high spontaneity.
I'm fortunate that at in all things involving music my musical mind's ear freely presents me with multiple ideas that contend among themselves to be made manifest out of the instrument; my main role is just to let through the idea that is best, using my musical judgement based on the venue, audience, nature of the tune, etc. This process feels natural and effortless, the spontaneity is kind of built in.
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Originally Posted by pauln
. But maybe doing it at all is key. Spontaneous could be built in, as you say, but is it really spontaneous if there is any filtering applied with judgement? I’d agree that highly experienced players can apply their judgement nearly instantaneously but isn’t that different than spontaneous? It’s up to each of us to set the bar for ourselves and question honestly how we’re achieving the music we produce.
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I dunno. Try to remember to breathe?
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